• Euphorazine@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    The only thing I would add is that with the electoral system, it’s not the candidate with the most electoral votes that win, it’s the candidate who gets half+1 votes (270 or more currently)

    If candidate A wins 250 votes, candidate B wins 200 votes and candidate C wins 88 votes, candidate A does not win. If there is no winner, the house of representatives votes for president, each state getting one vote.

    Another reason why third party presidential candidates are never serious contenders.

    • nzeayn@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      can we just set up a bot that does nothing but reply with these two comments to every “why no 3rd parties bro” question. We’ll turn it on three months before every US election and let it travel around lemmy servers. then turn if off until this whole cycle repeats.

        • basmati
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          7 hours ago

          You said to not vote third party, so you can’t vote for rcv.

          • sensiblepuffin@lemmy.world
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            4 hours ago

            Usually RCV is an initiative or referendum depending on how your state does it. In mine, it’s just a separate issue on the back that we have to vote for, alongside things like “should we institute a tax for schools” or “should we approve building a new park”. Entirely separate from voting for candidates for any position.

          • bamboo@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            6 hours ago

            You don’t need to vote third party to get Ranked Choice Voting. There are ballot measures this election to introduce ranked choice voting, independent on who you vote for President. You can vote for Harris and RCV if you’re in one of these states:

            Oregon

            Oregon voters will vote on Measure 117 in November 2024 on whether they will use ranked choice voting general elections for statewide and federal offices (starting in 2028).

            The Oregon Legislature passed the reform in 2023, but any change to the state constitution requires referral to the voters before enacting.

            Colorado

            Proposition 131 will appear on Colorado’s November 2024 ballot. If passed, it would establish an “all-candidate primary” where the top four vote getters move on to a ranked-choice general election.

            Idaho

            Proposition 1 has been certified to appear on Idaho’s November 2024 ballot. If passed, it would establish an “all-candidate primary” where the top four vote getters move on to a ranked-choice general election.

            Nevada

            Nevada voters will vote in November 2024 on whether they will use open primaries and ranked choice voting general elections (starting in 2026).

            Voters already approved it in 2022, but it needs to pass in two consecutive ballot measures in order to amend the state constitution.

            Washington D.C.

            Initiative 83 will open up the District’s primary elections to allow voters not registered with a political party to participate (~71,000 people). General elections will use ranked-choice voting where voters can rank up to 5 candidates.

            https://www.rankedvote.co/guides/understanding-ranked-choice-voting/2024-rcv-on-the-ballot

            • basmati
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              6 hours ago

              Oh that’s cute, you think the legislatures and judicial branches will allow mass adoption.

              If states can override ballot measures regarding legal cannabis, and they have repeatedly, they can override this. Neither side of the duopoly has any interest in losing power.

              • bamboo@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                5 hours ago

                Your point being that it’s futile to cast a vote for something that won’t come to fruition? Thanks for supporting the original point that voting for a third party candidate is a waste of your vote, and just helps Trump.

                • basmati
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                  4 hours ago

                  Electoralism is a joke in oligarchies, yes.